This alabaster relief depicts the typical conclusion of Assyrian
battle scenes: a review of the captured goods and prisoners.
Assyrian records give very precise numbers for such booty which
suggests that scribes were an important element of any military
campaign. They are shown at work on a relief from the South-West
Palace of Sennacherib, also in The British Museum.

Assyrian officials and soldiers bring enemy prisoners to the
king; one wearing a wide headband is picked out for special
attention. The captured goods are shown apparently floating in
mid-air but this was a stylistic device or simply because the
sculptors did not use exact perspective. The booty includes
cauldrons and a pair of ivory tusks. Large quantities of ivory and
metal work (vessels, horse trappings, furniture fittings) were
stored in certain rooms at the palace at Nimrud.

The scene continues to the left.

E.A.T.W. Budge, Assyrian sculptures in the B-1 (London, Trustees of the British Museum, 1914)